look at how you've walked this whole passage; the outcome is simply your conduct, summed. If it was sincere, the fortune is complete. Full love reading
The Backward Glance
Hexagram 10 · Line 6 meaning
"Look back over the path you have trodden and weigh what it has brought. When the whole is fulfilled, supreme good fortune comes."
Lü is the hexagram of conduct: how to walk through a dangerous world so that even the tiger does not bite. The weak treads behind the strong; the situation is delicate, the ground consequential. Yet the Judgment promises success — because what protects us is not power or cleverness but the quality of our step.
Hexagram 10 line 6 means conduct is judged by its fruits: examine the road behind you honestly. If the walking was sincere — humble, careful, true — the review itself completes the good fortune, for the outcome of a life is simply its conduct, summed. Where the record shows flaws, acceptance and correction still avail. You are what your steps have been; make the remaining ones count.
The sixth line is the end, and fittingly its act is a backward glance — the whole path taken in at once, weighed by what it actually produced. This is Treading's final teaching: the outcome was never a separate prize waiting at the finish; it is the walking, added up. That reframes everything the hexagram has said about conduct — the simplicity, the caution, the respect for the tiger — as the very substance of the result, not the means to it. "When the whole is fulfilled, supreme good fortune comes" because a road walked sincerely has already earned its fortune in the walking. And where the review turns up flaws, the line doesn't condemn: acceptance and correction still work, and the steps still ahead can still count.
Do stop and look back honestly over how you've walked this whole passage — not the results in isolation, but the quality of your conduct through them. Were the steps sincere: humble, careful, respectful, true? Where they were, let yourself register that the good fortune is already complete in them; you don't need an external prize to confirm a road well walked. Where the review shows flaws, don't spiral into self-reproach — accept them plainly and correct course, because the remaining steps still count toward the sum. This is a moment for clear-eyed accounting, not harsh judgment. Weigh the path, own what it shows, and walk the rest deliberately, knowing the walking is the outcome.
The change toward Hexagram 58
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 58, The Joyous, Lake — genuine joy, strong within and gentle without, the kind that deepens through sharing rather than draining. The link is the completion this line describes: a road reviewed and found sincere turns into real joy, the durable lake-kind resting on inner strength. The change tells you that honest conduct summed up doesn't just earn good fortune, it becomes gladness. And the Joyous multiplies through friendship — two lakes joined evaporate slower than one — so weigh the path in good company, share what it taught, and the satisfaction of a sincere journey deepens instead of fading. Earned review becomes lasting joy.
review the road you've travelled honestly. Sincere conduct is itself the result — and where there were flaws, correction still counts. Full career reading
judge by the whole path, not one moment. If your conduct through it was true, trust the outcome; if flawed, correct and continue. Full timing reading
If I weigh the whole road honestly, was the walking sincere?
Where do I need acceptance and correction rather than self-reproach?
Keep the line inside the full reading
A changing line becomes useful when you read it in the right order and keep it tied to the wider hexagram pattern.
Read the parent hexagram first so Line 6 stays anchored in the actual situation rather than floating as a detached slogan.
Let this line show where the pressure, correction, or opening is most active right now. It is usually the sharpest instruction in the cast.
Only after that should you compare the transformed figure and decide what movement this changing line is pointing toward.
If you want the wider method behind this sequence, read how to consult the I Ching or go deeper with the changing-lines guide.
Read the full line sequence
Simple Conduct
"Simple conduct. Progress without blame."
Hexagram 10 line 1 means at the beginning, plainness is your protection: advance quietly, want little, stay entangled in nothing. The danger is nostalgia for lost comfort, which breeds ambition and restlessness — and these push you to force progress and jump to conclusions. True advancement here comes from contentment with gradual progression. Release the frustration at how long things take; the humble walker, carrying nothing, passes where the laden cannot.
The Level Road
"Treading a smooth, level road. The steadfastness of one who stays in the dark brings good fortune."
Hexagram 10 line 2 means the road is smooth because of how you're walking it: quietly, in obscurity, not seeking notice, not quarrelling with fate, asking nothing of circumstances but the next stretch of road. By embracing simplicity and declining internal conflicts, the journey stays level even when the terrain isn't. Accept what you're allotted without demanding explanations, and contentment and good fortune follow of themselves.
Overreach
"The one-eyed man believes he sees; the lame man believes he can march. He treads on the tiger's tail and is bitten. Misfortune. Such daring belongs only to a warrior acting under his prince's command."
Hexagram 10 line 3 means partial ability is mistaking itself for full capacity — and this is where the bite comes. Pride and impulsiveness carry you into ventures beyond your strength, and the consequences arrive without sympathy. The corrective is honest self-measurement: recognise your limitations, exercise moderation, and let natural forces take their course rather than forcing outcomes. The more right your position feels, the humbler you must become.
Caution Succeeds
"Treading on the tiger's tail — with caution and circumspection, it leads to good fortune in the end."
Hexagram 10 line 4 means the same dangerous ground as overreach, but a different walker. Here the risk is real and must be taken; what secures it is wariness without paralysis. Resist the temptation to seize control of outcomes — such grasping brings peril. Attend instead to your own growth and understanding, move deliberately, and test each step. Dangerous undertakings can succeed — not through boldness, but through the alertness that never stops respecting the tiger.
Resolute Treading
"Resolute conduct. Remain steadfast — and aware of the danger."
Hexagram 10 line 5 means firmness is now required: a course must be held, a stand made clear. But resolution without ongoing awareness of danger becomes self-righteousness. Keep a firm grip on what's right while avoiding the obtrusive; respect others' dignity and let them find their own path; be assertive without imposing. This narrow ridge — decisive yet watchful, firm yet gentle — is the line's whole teaching, and walking it is success.
The Backward Glance
"Look back over the path you have trodden and weigh what it has brought. When the whole is fulfilled, supreme good fortune comes."
Hexagram 10 line 6 means conduct is judged by its fruits: examine the road behind you honestly. If the walking was sincere — humble, careful, true — the review itself completes the good fortune, for the outcome of a life is simply its conduct, summed. Where the record shows flaws, acceptance and correction still avail. You are what your steps have been; make the remaining ones count.
Read this hexagram in context
Delicate ground — tact and sincerity keep the tiger calm.
Delicate ground at work — conduct, not cleverness, keeps you safe.
Delicate ground — how you tread decides whether the tiger bites.
Delicate ground at home — tact and sincerity keep peace.
Tread carefully near the money risk — measure your step, not your nerve.
Character is how you step — tread carefully, and keep treading.
Demanding ground — know your level and tread carefully to pass.
Delicate ground — measure yourself honestly and tread with care.
You can act on risky ground — tread carefully and measure yourself.
Walk rightly on the tiger's tail — sincerity keeps fate calm.
Delicate social ground — tact and sincerity keep the tiger calm.
Delicate ground ahead — how you walk decides how it goes.
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A quiet place to keep returning
Beyond a single reading: True Essence is a daily pause to steady the mind and return to clearer judgement — a seven-day return, free to begin, then a practice that continues day by day.
Begin the 7-day return →Consult the I Ching with Hexagram 10 in mind
If Line 6 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.